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After 3 Years, Freenet 0.7 Released

evanbd writes "After over 3 years of work, the Freenet Project has announced the release of Freenet 0.7. 'Freenet is software designed to allow the free exchange of information over the Internet without fear of censorship, or reprisal. To achieve this Freenet makes it very difficult for adversaries to reveal the identity, either of the person publishing, or downloading content' ... 'The journey towards Freenet 0.7 began in 2005 with the realization that some of Freenet's most vulnerable users needed to hide the fact that they were using Freenet, not just what they were doing with it. The result of this realization was a ground-up redesign and rewrite of Freenet, adding a "darknet" capability, allowing users to limit who their Freenet software would communicate with to trusted friends.'"

8 of 365 comments (clear)

  1. How do you find trusted friends on a darknet? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    If you don't have many real-life friends how are you ever going to find the darknets, and the content on them? If you only connect with a few people, that's not going to help you find very much content is it? Is there a big "greynet" where everyone has somehow established a level of trust (proved they are not gov't agents or lawyers), and at the same time there are enough people that there is likely to be some content worth finding?

    1. Re:How do you find trusted friends on a darknet? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      And by making the default number of nodes much smaller (10x) and the splitfiles having many more parts (16x) corrolation attacks are far, far easier now three years down the road than they were on 0.5, which is presumaly why the "insecure" mode is so heavily adviced against everywhere. Nevermind that having really trusted friends as friends on Freenet means you'll all get raided while having random peers act as "trusted" friends probably means some of them are doing nasty stuff and will get you raided. I'd say expressing trust to some of the other nodes is a far greater liability, and 0.7 is a dead end. You should have gone straight for premixing networks, would be a much better use of the time.

  2. Re:Congratulations to all pedophiles. by evanbd · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Wikileaks has been mirrored to Freenet more than once. I don't know of an up to date link, or a single regularly updated source, but it's there.

    A large number of photos from Tibet are available, and there is at least one highly active user posting them and keeping them up to date, with commentary.

  3. Re:Congratulations to all pedophiles. QWZX by smittyoneeach · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The only purpose it's pretty much used for is the exchange of the worst crimes of humanity.
    Also, guns kill people
    Cars kill the enviornment
    Retention of individual sovereignty/responsibility/money kills "fairness".
    So, I'm thinkin': a government program can fix all of these woes.
    --
    Get thee glass eyes, and, like a scurvy politician, seem to see things thou dost not.--King Lear
  4. The failure of Freenet by PhrostyMcByte · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Freenet is an important concept. On it you get complete freedom of speech: the ability to discuss and spread your ideas, with full anonymity and freedom from censorship. Of course, this means that you will probably come across things on it that will go against your beliefs. While nothing forces you to actually visit these freesites, you will have to come to terms that this might be cached on your computer even without you visiting them. But this is important to freedom of speech: if people where able to censor anything, the system just wouldn't work.

    So why does Freenet fail? Lack of documentation. I don't mean ease of use in the interface - I mean for the protocols and network design. A system as important as Freenet -- one that people expect unfaltering anonymity and security from -- should be rigorously and meticulously documented.

    But it's not. In fact, if you bring it up with the Freenet developers they will gladly tell you this is intentional -- that they use security through obscurity to guard against someone finding a way to break the system.

    So -- do you trust your freedom with the competency of a handful of developers to make a good design? I don't. I want as many people looking at the system as possible. I want people to really bash on it, to try to break it. This gives me confidence, not worry, because problems will be solved sooner than later.

    This would also open up the possibility of more than one client to access the network. If you have two separate clients that implement the same strict protocol and one of them messes up, it's likely to be caught far sooner than with just one. An immediate example of where this would have helped is with a bug that existed in 0.7's AES implementation for a very long time, where the data wasn't being encrypted properly.

    The Freenet developers don't want multiple clients either -- again, they worry that one might break the network. This line of thought is incomprehensible to me, because as a developer I would want things that could break my network to be discovered as soon as possible so I could fix the design.

    Sure, you could look at the source code. It is Open Source, after all. But what if you don't know Java? I don't particularly want to learn Java just so I can review Freenet's code. As a C++ developer I might be able to read and understand most of it, but I don't trust myself to review something so important without years of prior Java experience -- the chance that I'd miss something is just too great.

  5. Re:Congratulations to all pedophiles. by Hyppy · · Score: 5, Interesting

    If I'm not mistaken, you could always load up freenet and use a Truecrypt drive as your "swap" space.

  6. Freedom of Speech vs. Freedom of Hosts by scruffy · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I am impressed by Freenet's devotion to freedom of speech, but if my computer is hosting content, I should have the freedom to choose what that content is. Freedom of speech does not mean I should have to provide any resources to help you. This is where Freenet goes overboard. Freedom of speech is not an absolute.

  7. Re:Are we just now getting this dupe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Do you know that you can use the 0.7 open net?